News
Release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 10, 2006
Contact: Michael A. Sanders, New Orleans PIO
Number: 504-840-1070
Internet
Pharmacy Shut Down
(New
Orleans, Louisiana) – William J. Renton, Jr., Special Agent in
Charge of the New Orleans Field Division, Drug Enforcement Administration
(DEA) today announced the closure and Immediate Suspension of the Federal
Controlled Substance Registration of the Elite Pharmacy, Inc.
For more than a
year, Elite Pharmacy, Inc., 10017 Jefferson Highway, Suite 101, River
Ridge, Louisiana, has been the subject of an investigation that determined
that it had filled approximately 500 to 600 prescriptions per day which
were obtained from multiple Internet websites. The vast majority of
the prescriptions were issued for controlled substances, and were authorized
by physicians who practiced medicine outside the State of Louisiana.
According to the Louisiana Board of Pharmacy (LBP), Elite’s method
of prescribing controlled substances was much different than its original
license application in January, 2005 claiming it would be a closed
door pharmacy serving long-term care facilities.
Elite dispensed
inordinate amounts of controlled substances to Internet customers throughout
the United States. Within Elite’s first three months in business
from January 20, 2005 to March 2005, Elite became the fifth top
purchaser of hydrocodone in the State of Louisiana. Elite purchased
4,595,400 dosage units of hydrocodone from January through December
2005. This was approximately 50 times more than the national average
for pharmacy purchases of hydrocodone and approximately 40 times more
that the average for such pharmacy purchases in the State of Louisiana.
Elite’s average
monthly hydrocodone purchases for the first eight months of 2006 increased
by 20 percent more than their average monthly purchases for the entire
year of 2005. In fact, Elite’s hydrocodone purchases from January
1, 2006 to August 31, 2006, were the highest in the State of Louisiana and
were more than double those of the next highest hydrocodone purchaser
in the State of Louisiana. Also, Elite was the tenth highest purchaser
of hydrocodone in the United States for the same period. During
audits of Elite’s controlled substance records, investigators
found shortages for Alprazolam (Xanax), and hydrocodone. On three different
occasions, audits of the pharmacy showed wide variances in the amounts
of drugs ordered, on-hand and dispensed.
Elite would dispense,
controlled substances to customers, whose prescriptions Elite received
by logging onto an Internet website, despite substantial evidence that
the prescriptions were written by practitioners who did not have a
doctor-patient relationship with the customer to whom Elite was dispensing
controlled substances. Thus, the controlled substances dispensed by
Elite were based on “prescriptions” issued for other then
a legitimate medical purpose and outside the course of professional
conduct. For example, Elite filled numerous prescriptions that were
authorized by the same physician, on the same day, for multiple Internet
customers who did not reside in the state in which the physician resided.
Also, Elite filled large quantities of prescriptions per day, per physician;
and the prescriptions were for disproportionate amounts of one or two
types of highly addictive and abused controlled substances.
On June 12, 2006,
Elite filled 501 controlled substance prescriptions for 11 out-of-state
physicians and one in-state physician. On June 14, 2006, Elite filled
423 controlled substance prescriptions for 11 out-of-state physicians
and one in-state physician. On June 16, 2006, Elite filled 460 controlled
substance prescriptions to 10 out-of-state physicians and three in-state
physicians. On June 27, 2006, Elite filled 365 prescriptions for 11
out-of-state physicians. Elite knew, or should have known that these
prescriptions were not issued “for a legitimate medical purpose
by an individual practitioner acting in the usual course of his professional
practice”.
Hydrocodone is the
generic name of an addictive prescription painkiller that is classified
under federal narcotics laws as a Schedule III controlled substance.
When hydrocodone is legally prescribed for a legitimate medical purpose,
it is typically used to combat acute, severe pain. Accordingly, the
prescription is for a modest number of pills to be taken over a short
period of time. Alprazolam is the generic name for the popular anti-anxiety
drug Xanax, a Schedule IV controlled substance.
A criminal investigation
into this manner is continuing, and resulted in the issuance and execution
of a Federal Search Warrant today. When the investigation is completed,
the facts developed will be presented to the United States Attorney’s
Office for the Eastern District of Louisiana. The investigation is
being conducted by the DEA Baton Rouge Task Force group and DEA Diversion
Investigators.
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